So we knew that the <a href="http://www.inhabitat.com/2010/04/09/the-shanghai-corporate-pavilion-made-of-recycled-cd-cases-nears-completion/" target="_blank">Shanghai Corporate Pavilion</a> was rad - it's made from <a href="http://www.inhabitat.com/2010/04/09/recycled-materials" target="_blank">recycled cd cases</a>, but we didn't know how rad until the designers of the project sent us the <b>first pictures of the completed pavilion</b>. The entire facade of the building is covered in an LED array that can be changed on a whim, but -- and here's where it gets cool -- the lighting scheme is determined by people interacting inside the building. Computers aren't controlling the lighting, people are with their actions, like waving their arms and clapping their hands!

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Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

Millions of LED lights cover the exterior of the pavilion, which is made from recycled materials. Rather than being controlled by a computer program, the lighting is determined by the visitors inside. The Dream Cube pulses different colors and designs in response to the the physical actions of the visitors participating inside.
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photo credit: Basil Childers

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Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

ESI Design and architect Yung Ho Chang collaborated on the process from the beginning, designing a building focused on the visitors' experience and creating a synergy between the exhibit and the architecture.
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photo credit: Basil Childers

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Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

As visitors enter the building, they wait in the cube and learn about how they have the ability to control the lights through their actions.
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photo credit: Basil Childers

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Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

By clapping their hands and waving their arms they can change the color of the lights. This practice session is to help build up the anticipation for what happens in the Dream Control Room.
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photo credit: Basil Childers

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Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

Other internal ambient conditions help visitors transition from the outdoor environment to one of a dream-like state. Bluish lights and ambient music ease that transition.
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photo credit: Basil Childers

Then visitors walk through an interactive exhibit on the rural beginnings of Shanghai. The exhibit includes media walls, sculptural lighting as well as curious, glowing plant beds.
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photo credit: Basil Childers

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Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

As visitors travel along the path of Green Shanghai, they experience the different seasons - spring, summer, fall and winter.
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photo credit: Basil Childers

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Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

Visitors can change the color of the plant beds by simply placing their hands on the interactive LEDs
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photo credit: Basil Childers

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Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

After the tranquil stroll through early Shanghai, visitors enter a new world representative of the current Shanghai, which eerily resembles the interior of a Las Vegas casino.
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photo credit: Basil Childers

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Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

Then visitors enter the "Dream Cube Control Room" through a secret door, where they meet Professor Butterfly, who represents people's dreams for the future. She takes them on a 360 degree tour of Shanghai, complete with special effects.
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photo credit: Basil Childers

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Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

Professor Butterfly gets the audience to participate by performing a series of actions - clapping their hands and waving their arms, which makes the exterior of the building pulse in response. The audience is then "transformed" because their collective actions elicit a response in the building. Profound huh?
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photo credit: Basil Childers

Shanghai Corporate Pavilion Dream Cube

So we knew that the Shanghai Corporate Pavilion was rad - it's made from recycled cd cases, but we didn't know how rad until the designers of the project sent us the first pictures of the completed pavilion. The entire facade of the building is covered in an LED array that can be changed on a whim, but -- and here's where it gets cool -- the lighting scheme is determined by people interacting inside the building. Computers aren't controlling the lighting, people are with their actions, like waving their arms and clapping their hands!